Abstract. Introduction. Osteoarthritis (OA) affects more than four million people in the UK alone. Bone marrow lesions (BMLs) are a common feature of subchondral bone pathology in OA. Both bone volume fraction and mineral density within the BML are abnormal. The aim of this study was to investigate the effect of a potential treatment (bone augmentation) for BMLs on the knee joint mechanics in cases with healthy and fully degenerated cartilage, using finite element (FE) models of the joint to study the effect of BML size. Methods. FE models of a human
Introduction. Osteoarthritis (OA), a painful, debilitating joint disease, often caused by excessive joint stress, is a leading cause of disability (World Health Organisation, 2003) and increases with age and obesity. A 5° varus malalignment increases loading in the medial knee compartment from 70% to 90% (Tetsworth and Paley, 1994). Internal unloading implants, placed subcutaneously upon the medial aspect of the knee joint, are designed to offload the medial compartment of the knee without violating natural joint tissues. The aim of this study is to investigate the effect of an unloading implant, such as the Atlas™ knee system, on stress within the
There have been many reports which suggest that in patients with tibiofemoral osteoarthritis, a reduction in joint space is demonstrated better on weight-bearing radiographs taken with the knee in semiflexion than in full extension. The reduction has been attributed to the loss of articular cartilage in the contact area in a semiflexed arthritic knee. None of these studies have, however, included normal knees. We have therefore undertaken a prospective, double-blind, randomised study in order to evaluate the difference in the joint-space of arthroscopically-proven normal
Aims. This study aimed to analyze kinematics and kinetics of the
Aims. Focal knee arthroplasty is an attractive alternative to knee arthroplasty for young patients because it allows preservation of a large amount of bone for potential revisions. However, the mechanical behaviour of cartilage has not yet been investigated because it is challenging to evaluate in vivo contact areas, pressure, and deformations from metal implants. Therefore, this study aimed to determine the contact pressure in the
In an attempt to alleviate symptoms of the disease, patients with knee osteoarthrosis (KOA) frequently alter their gait patterns. Understanding the underlying pathomechanics and identifying KOA phenotypes is essential for improving treatments. We aimed to investigate altered kinematics in patients with KOA to identify subgroups. Sixty-six patients with symptomatic KOA scheduled for total knee arthroplasty and 12 age-matched healthy volunteers with asymptomatic knees were included. We used k-means to separate the patients based on dynamic radiostereometric assessed knee kinematics. Ligament lesions, KOA score, and clinical outcome were assessed by magnetic resonance imaging, radiographs, and patient reported outcome measures, respectively. We identified four clusters that were supported by clinical characteristics. Compared with the healthy group; The flexion group (n=20): revealed increased flexion, greater adduction, and joint narrowing and consisted primarily of patients with medial KOA. The abduction group (n=17): revealed greater abduction, joint narrowing and included primarily patients with lateral KOA. The anterior draw group (n=10): revealed greater anterior draw, external tibial rotation, lateral tibial shift, adduction, and joint narrowing. This group was composed of patients with medial KOA, some degree of anterior cruciate ligament lesion and the greatest KOA score. The external rotation group (n=19): revealed greater external tibial rotation, lateral tibial shift, adduction, and joint narrowing while no anterior draw was observed. This group included primarily patients with medial collateral and posterior cruciate ligament lesions. Patients with KOA can, based on their gait patterns, be classified into four subgroups, which relate to their clinical characteristics. The findings add to our understanding of associations between disease pathology characteristics in the knee and the pathomechanics in patients with KOA. A next step is to investigate if patients in the pathomechanic clusters have different outcomes following total knee arthroplasty.
Accurate in vivo knee joint contact forces are required for joint simulator protocols and finite element models during the development and testing of total knee replacements (Varadarajan et al., 2008.) More accurate knowledge of knee joint contact forces during high flexion activities may lead to safer high flexion implant designs, better understanding of wear mechanisms, and prevention of complications such as aseptic loosening (Komistek et al., 2005.) High flexion is essential for lifestyle and cultural activities in the developing world, as well as in Western cultures, including ground-level tasks and chores, prayer, leisure, and toileting (Hemmerich et al., 2006.) In vivo tibial loads have been reported while kneeling; but only while the subject was at rest in the kneeling position (Zhao et al., 2007), meaning that the loads were submaximal due to muscle relaxation and thigh-calf contact support. The objective of this study was to report the in vivo loads experienced during high flexion activities and to determine how closely the measured axial joint contact forces can be estimated using a simple, non-invasive model. It provides unique data to better interpret non-invasively determined joint-contact forces, as well as directly measured tiobiofemoral joint contact force data for two subjects. Two subjects with instrumented tibial implants performed kneeling and deep knee bend activities. Two sets of trials were carried out for each activity. During the first set, an electromagnetic tracking system and two force plates were used to record lower limb kinematics and ground reaction forces under the foot and under the knee when it was on the ground. In the second set, three-dimensional joint contact forces were directly measured in vivo via instrumented tibial implants (Heinlein et al., 2007.) The measured axial joint contact forces were compared to estimates from a non-invasive joint contact force model (Smith et al., 2008.) The maximum mean axial forces measured during the deep knee bend were 24.2 N/kg at 78.2° flexion (subject A) and 31.1 N/kg at 63.5° flexion (subject B) during the deep knee bend (Figure 1.) During the kneeling activity, the maximum mean axial force measured was 29.8 N/kg at 86.8° flexion (subject B.) While the general shapes of the model-estimated curves were similar to the directly measured curves, the axial joint contact force model underestimated the measured contact forces by 7.0 N/kg on average (Figure 2.) The most likely contributor to this underestimation is the lack of co-contraction in the model. The study protocol was limited in that data could not be simultaneously collected due to electromagnetic interference between the motion tracking system and the inductively powered instrumented tibial component. Because skin-mounted markers were used, kinematics may be affected by skin motion artefacts. Despite these limitations, this study presents valuable information that will advance the development of high flexion total knee replacements. The study provides in vivo measurements and non-invasive estimates of joint contact forces during high flexion activities that can be used for joint simulator protocols and finite element modeling.
Autologous osteochondral grafting has demonstrated positive outcomes for treating articular cartilage defects by replacing the damaged region with a cylindrical graft consisting of bone with a layer of cartilage, taken from a non-loadbearing region of the knee. Despite positive clinical use, factors that cause graft subsidence or poor integration are relatively unknown. The aim of this study was to develop finite element (FE) models of osteochondral grafts within a
Aims. The aim of this retrospective study was to determine if there are differences in short-term clinical outcomes among four different types of matrix-associated autologous chondrocyte transplantation (MACT). Methods. A total of 88 patients (mean age 34 years (SD 10.03), mean BMI 25 kg/m. 2. (SD 3.51)) with full-thickness chondral lesions of the
Abstract. Objectives. Investigate Magnetic Resonance Imaging (MRI) as an alternative to Computerised Tomography (CT) when calculating kinematics using Biplane Video X-ray (BVX) by quantifying the accuracy of a combined MRI-BVX methodology by comparing with results from a gold-standard bead-based method. Methods. Written informed consent was given by one participant who had four tantalum beads implanted into their distal femur and proximal tibia from a previous study. Three-dimensional (3D) models of the femur and tibia were segmented (Simpleware Scan IP, Synopsis) from an MRI scan (Magnetom 3T Prisma, Siemens). Anatomical Coordinate Systems (ACS) were applied to the bone models using automated algorithms. 1. The beads were segmented from a previous CT and co-registered with the MRI bone models to calculate their positions. BVX (60 FPS, 1.25 ms pulse width) was recorded whilst the participant performed a lunge. The beads were tracked, and the ACS position of the femur and tibia were calculated at each frame (DSX Suite, C-Motion Inc.). The beads were digitally removed from the X-rays (MATLAB, MathWorks) allowing for blinded image-registration of the MRI models to the radiographs. The mean difference and standard deviation (STD) between bead-generated and image-registered bone poses were calculated for all degrees of freedom (DOF) for both bones. Using the principles defined by Grood and Suntay. 2. , 6 DOF kinematics of the
Introduction. Instability in ACL deficient knees can lead to medial compartment osteoarthritis. The risk of developing significant OA is 5x higher in knees with ACL deficiency. In associated Varus, there is quicker progression of the medial OA along with a varus thrust exerting strain on the ACL graft. The simultaneous valgus HTO and ACL reconstruction decompresses the medial
From October 2005 to March 2014, we performed 46 arthroscopic surgeries for painful knee after knee arthroplasty. We excluded 16 cases for this study such as, unicompartmental knee arthroplasty, infection, patellar clunk syndrome, patellofemoral synovial hyperplasia, aseptic loosening, and follow-up period after arthroscopic surgery less than 6 months. Thirty cases matched the criteria. They had knee pain longer than 6 months after initial total knee arthroplasty (TKA), they had marked tenderness at medial and/or lateral
Aims. A functional anterior cruciate ligament (ACL) or posterior cruciate ligament (PCL) has been assumed to be required for patients undergoing unicompartmental knee arthroplasty (UKA). However, this assumption has not been thoroughly tested. Therefore, this study aimed to assess the biomechanical effects exerted by cruciate ligament-deficient knees with medial UKAs regarding different posterior tibial slopes. Methods. ACL- or PCL-deficient models with posterior tibial slopes of 1°, 3°, 5°, 7°, and 9° were developed and compared to intact models. The kinematics and contact stresses on the
Many recent knee prostheses are designed aiming to the physiological knee kinematics on
Summary Statement. An MRI-derived subject-specific finite element model of a knee joint was loaded with subject-specific kinetic data to investigate stress and strain distribution in knee cartilage during the stance phase of gait in-vivo. Introduction. Finite element analysis (FEA) has been widely used to predict the local stress and strain distribution at the
Introduction. t is accepted dogma in total knee arthroplasty (TKA) that resecting the posterior cruciate ligament (PCL) increases the flexion space by approximately 4mm, which significantly affects intra-operative decisions and surgical techniques. Unfortunately, this doctrine is based on historical cadaveric studies of limited size. This study purpose was to more accurately determine the effect of PCL resection on the tibiofemoral flexion gap dimension in vivo in a large sample. Methods.
Non-invasive, in vivo measurement of the three-dimensional (3-D) motion of the
Introduction. Traditional applied loading of the knee joint in experimental testing of RTKR components is usually confined to replicating the
Eighty-one patients treated by patellectomy for osteoarthritis have been reviewed. Eighty-seven knees were examined with a mean follow-up period of six and a half years. Clinical and radiological assessment was carried out and the results have been analysed. A good result was achieved in 53 per cent, a fair result in 26 per cent and a poor result in 21 per cent. The overall result did not deteriorate significantly with time and the radiological appearance of the